You would want it powder coated, not painted. Powder ccoating is a lot more durable than paint. It's what they use for outdoor furniture these days and it can hold up to decades of abuse. It will cost you from $300-$1000 depending on where you are located, the color you want, your time frame, and if you just drop off the parts that you want done or you drop off the range and want them to pull it apart and put it back together. (I would NEVER want anyone but me or an appliance installer doing disassembly and assembly on my expensive range.)

Here's the most commong RAL colors available from powder coating shops.

There are sealed burner ranges that offer colors like Viking and Bertazzoni.

BTW:High btu burners don't burn food. Uneven heat distribution burns food. Sealed burners are going to have a hot ring around pan and the rest not as hot. Food on top of that ring tends to burn. Good pans and long pre-heat help but don't eliminate that. Turn down high btu open burner and you are good to go. Especially if you are going with color, CC or BS is a no brainer.

deeageaux
"BTW:High btu burners don't burn food. Uneven heat distribution burns food. Sealed burners are going to have a hot ring around pan and the rest not as hot. Food on top of that ring tends to burn. Good pans and long pre-heat help but don't eliminate that. Turn down high btu open burner and you are good to go. Especially if you are going with color, CC or BS is a no brainer."

I think that the OP is making a joke about the high BTU burners and understands that the burners are adjustable.

All ring burners make a hot ring of heat, whether they are sealed or unsealed. An open burner does not magically make a pan heat evenly. If you have a good conductive pan, yes you can eliminate that ring, even without a long preheat.

All ring burners make a hot ring of heat, whether they are sealed or unsealed. An open burner does not magically make a pan heat evenly. If you have a good conductive pan, yes you can eliminate that ring, even without a long preheat.

It is not magic but engineering.

Open burners in question are not rings.

They heat what aproximates even.

No, you can not eliminate that ring made by Wolf sealed burners or similar burners. Not even using magic.

If you have your range painted / powder coated and the finish fails you are screwed. Your warranty will also most likely be voided because you took it apart. If you buy a factory finished range and the finish fails they will be the ones responsible. I have read posts where Capital and BlueStar have replaced oven doors etc. because of finish problems.

Thanks, everyone - will ponder, good point about voiding the warranty.
Yes, half joke on the burning, but also know myself and tend to be more of a slow-cooker/simmer cook, rather than high heat/searer, so most likely would have the burners turned down most of the time. Therefore, not sure how beneficial the high btu burners are.

I had a client that had a GE Cafe range powder coated to red with the high temp powder coat (Not all is suitable for exposure to high temps). Or at least the oven doors, which is all that really shows. It's been a couple of years so I don't know how it's holding up, but it sure looked good when it was done! I think it cost her around $500 to have done at a specialty powder coating business, not an automotive painter. Powder coating has to go in an oven to melt together and coat the item, sorta like old fashioned porcelain did and not every automotive paint shop will even deal with it.

If you don't want a high BTU range, then forget looking at pro style and stick with a regular range. You'll save money for something else.